| (19) |
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(11) |
EP 0 042 730 B1 |
| (12) |
EUROPEAN PATENT SPECIFICATION |
| (45) |
Mention of the grant of the patent: |
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20.02.1985 Bulletin 1985/08 |
| (22) |
Date of filing: 18.06.1981 |
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| (51) |
International Patent Classification (IPC)4: G01S 7/02 |
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| (54) |
Radar polarisation detector and method of radar target detection
Radarpolarisationsdetektor und Verfahren zur Radarzielortung
Détecteur de polarisation de signaux radar et procédé de repérage radar des cibles
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| (84) |
Designated Contracting States: |
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DE FR GB |
| (30) |
Priority: |
23.06.1980 US 161797 23.06.1980 US 161798
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| (43) |
Date of publication of application: |
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30.12.1981 Bulletin 1981/52 |
| (71) |
Applicant: SPERRY CORPORATION |
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New York, N.Y. 10019 (US) |
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| (72) |
Inventors: |
|
- Barnes, Richard Morson
Acton
Massachusetts 01720 (US)
- Vachula, George Michael
Harvard
Massachusetts 01451 (US)
- Bennett, Clarence Leonard, Jr.
Groton
Massachusetts 01450 (US)
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| (74) |
Representative: Singleton, Jeffrey |
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Eric Potter Clarkson
St. Mary's Court
St. Mary's Gate Nottingham NG1 1LE Nottingham NG1 1LE (GB) |
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| |
|
| Note: Within nine months from the publication of the mention of the grant of the European
patent, any person may give notice to the European Patent Office of opposition to
the European patent
granted. Notice of opposition shall be filed in a written reasoned statement. It shall
not be deemed to
have been filed until the opposition fee has been paid. (Art. 99(1) European Patent
Convention).
|
[0001] This invention relates to the art of radar detection and more specifically to a radar
polarisation detector and a method of detecting the presence of a radar target immersed
in clutter, by utilising the polarisation of a signal reflected from the target.
[0002] It is well known in the radar art that a polarised signal incident upon clutter will
become depolarised on reflection. Prior art techniques have considered the use of
polarisation information to enhance target detection and clutter discrimination. In
U.S. Patent No. 3,772,689, a method is disclosed in which the amplitude maxima and
minima of the reflected signal are noted as the polarisation of the incident signal
is varied. The amount of polarisation variation for a maximum ratio of echo amplitudes
is representative of the complexity of the illuminated target. Such a system, while
utilising polarisation information does not develop a sufficient detection statistic
nor does it minimise the effects of clutter. Thus a method is sought with which the
polarisation information contained in a reflected radar signal may be completely characterised.
[0003] Polarisation of signals received by a radar system may be utilised to describe the
polarisation characteristics, known as Stokes parameters. In the past, Stokes parameters
have been used to describe the polarisation of optical frequency signals. A description
of such use is presented by Born Et Wolf, "Principles of Optics", McMillan Company,
1964, (pages 30-32 and 544-545). The present invention provides a detector which may
utilise the Stokes parameters of a returned radar signal to enhance the detection
of a radar target immersed in clutter.
[0004] The invention which is defined in the appended claims, provides a detector and method
which examines the polarisation of reflected target signals immersed in clutter. A
receiver having channels responsive to a multiplicity of polarisation components provides
output signals representative of each such component. In one preferred embodiment
of the invention, these channels are coupled to a signal processor wherein the representative
signals are processed to extract characteristic polarisation parameters of the reflected
signal. Signals representative of the characteristic polarisation parameters are generated
and compared with a predetermined threshold to establish the presence of a target.
[0005] In another preferred embodiment, these channels are coupled to a signal modifying
circuit wherein one representative signal is phase shifted with respect to the other
channels, and the amplitude of the representative signals are varied according to
predetermined angles of polarisation. These phase shifted and amplitude modified signals
are then coupled to a signal processor wherein the representative signals are processed
to extract characteristic polarisation parameters of the reflected signal. Signals
representative of the characteristic polarisation parameters are generated and compared
with a predetermined threshold to establish the presence of a target.
[0006] Two preferred embodiments of detector according to the invention will now be described,
by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:-
Figures 1 a and 1 b are together a block diagram of the first embodiment of detector,
Figure 2 is a graph of a waveform useful in explaining the operation of the first
and second embodiments of the invention,
Figures 3a and 3b are together a block diagram of the second embodiment of detector,
Figure 4 shows a signal modifying circuit alternative to that shown in Figure 3a,
Figure 5 is a diagram useful in explaining the operation of the second embodiment,
and
Figure 6 is a table of mathematical expressions useful in explaining the operation
of the second embodiment.
[0007] Referring to Figures 1a and 1 b, the radar target polarisation detector forming the
first embodiment comprises a transceiver 11, a processor 12, a threshold detector
54, and indicator means 55. The transceiver 11 includes a frequency modulated continuous
wave (FMCW) transmitter 13 coupled to an input terminal of a power divider 14, an
output terminal of which is coupled to an attenuator 16 and an input terminal of a
mixer 34 via a directional coupler 15. The attenuator 16 is coupled to an antenna
21, the antenna 21 being also coupled to the mixer 34 via a circulator 20. The output
terminal of the mixer 34 is coupled to transceiver output terminal 11 a via a range
gate filter 35. A second output terminal of the power divider 14 is coupled to the
input terminal of a variable phase shifter 22, the output terminal of which is coupled
to the input terminal of an attenuator 23, the output terminal of which is coupled
to a second antenna 25 via a circulator 24. The antenna 25 is also coupled via the
circulator 24 to the input terminal 26a of a mixer 26, a second input terminal 26b
of which is coupled to output terminal 14b of the power divider 14 via a directional
coupler 27. Output terminal 26c of the mixer 26 is in turn coupled to an input terminal
of a range gate filter 30, the output terminal of which is coupled to transceiver
output terminal 11b.
[0008] The processor 12 is coupled at its input terminals 12a and 12b to the transceiver
output terminals 11 a and llb, respectively. The terminal 12b is coupled to a detector
31 which is in turn coupled to a squaring circuit 38, the output terminal of which
is coupled to the input terminal of an integrator 32. The output terminal of the integrator
32 is coupled both to an input terminal 33b of a summer 33 and to a positive input
terminal 41b of a subtractor 41. Similarly, the terminal 12a is coupled to a detector
36, the output terminal of which is coupled to a squaring circuit 37 with the output
terminal of the latter being coupled to the input terminal of an integrator 40. The
output terminal of the integrator 40 is coupled both to an input terminal 33a of the
summer 33 and to a negative input terminal 41 a of the subtractor 41. The processor
input terminals 12a and 12b are further coupled to terminals 42a and 42b, respectively,
of a multiplier 42. An output terminal 42c of the multiplier 42 is coupled to a filter
43, the output terminal of which is coupled to an input terminal of an amplifier 44,
the output terminal thereof being coupled to the input terminal of an integrator 45.
The processor input terminal 12a is also coupled to a phase shifter 46, the output
terminal of which is coupled to an input terminal 50a of a multiplier 50. The processor
input terminal 12b is additionally coupled to an input terminal 50b of the multiplier
50, while the output terminal 50c thereof is coupled to an amplifier 52 via a filter
51, with the output terminal of the amplifier 52 being coupled to the input terminal
of an integrator 53. The output terminals of the summer 33, subtractor 41, integrator
45 and integrator 53 are coupled to threshold detector input terminals 54a, 54b, 54c
and 54d, respectively, of the threshold detector 54, the output terminal of which
is coupled to the indicator means 55.
[0009] The transceiver 11 performs the functions of both a dual input receiver and dual
output transmitter. The FMCW transmitter 13 generates a linear FM signal that is coupled
to the antennae 21 and 25 which may have polarisations that are substantially orthogonal
to each other. For the purposes of discussion, the antenna 21 will be considered vertically
polarised and the antenna 25 horizontally polarised. The relative phase and amplitude
of the signal applied to the vertically polarised antenna 21 and the horizontally
polarised antenna 25 can be varied, allowing the user to transmit a signal with any
elliptical polarisation desired. It should be noted that many different antenna and
signal feed configurations may be used, and that the configuration described is but
one of these many configurations. FMCW transmitter 13 generates a linear FM signal
with a time duration T that exceeds the signal round-trip time delay At required for
the signal to be transmitted from the antennae 21 and 25, reflected from the target,
and received by the antennae 21 and 25. This linear FMCW signal is coupled to the
power divider 14 from which linear FM signals are coupled to the vertically polarised
antenna 21 via the attenuator 16 and the circulator 20, and to the horizontally polarised
antenna 25 via the attenuator 23 and the circulator 24. The attenuators 16 and 23
are used to vary the amplitude of the signal applied to the vertically polarised antenna
21 and the horizontally polarised antenna 25, respectively. Alternatively, the power
divider 14 may be constructed to vary the power applied to each antenna 21 or 25.
The linear FM signal coupled to the horizontally polarised antenna 25 may be shifted
in phase by the phase shifter 22 to provide a phase difference between the signals
coupled to the antennae 21 and 25. This phase difference and the amplitude ratio provided
by the attenuators 16 and 23 may be chosen such that horizontal and vertical components
of the transmitted wave establish any desired elliptical polarisation. It should be
noted that linear and circular polarisations are merely special cases of elliptical
polarisation.
[0010] The antennae 21 and 25 will be responsive to the vertically and horizontally polarised
components, respectively, of a signal reflected from a target. Considering the reception
of the vertically polarised signal first, the antenna 21 will be energised by the
vertically polarised signal component of the reflected linear FM signal, which through
the circulator 20 is coupled to the mixer 34, to which a portion of the transmitted
linear FM signal is coupled via the directional coupler 15. The signals coupled to
the mixer 34 are heterodyned therein to provide a signal frequency that is a function
of the time delay between the transmitted and received signal, as will be explained.
[0011] Referring now to Figure 2, the frequency versus time characteristic of the transmitted
signal 60 generated by the FMCW transmitter 13 and the signal 61 reflected from an
illuminated target are shown as they appear at the input terminals of the mixer 34.
The time delay At between the signals 60 and 61 is the time required for the transmitted
signal to propagate through space from the antenna 21, be reflected back from the
illuminated target and be received by the antenna 21. Thus, if the transmitted signal
60 begins at time to, the reflected signal will not appear at the input to the mixer
34 until time t
1, where t1-to=M. Since the transmitted signal, and consequently the reflected signal,
has a linear frequency versus time characteristic, there will be a constant frequency
difference Δf between the transmitted signal 60 and reflected signal 61. The mixer
34 will produce both sum and difference frequencies of which either frequency may
be selected. The filter 35 may be of the form of a narrow band filter which can be
adjusted to different centre frequencies and thereby function as a range gate. As
previously described, the frequency Δf produced by the mixer 34 is dependent upon
the distance d the transmitted signal must travel before it is reflected and received
by the antenna 20 and can be expressed as follows:

where
d=the distance between the antenna and the illuminated target.
Δ =the difference between the transmitted and received signal frequencies.
BW =the bandwidth of the transmitted linear FM signal.
c =free space propagation velocity.
T=the period of the linear FM signal
Thus, by adjusting the centre frequency F
c of the filter 35 to pass only a certain limited band of frequencies centred at Δf,
the output signal E
v(t) may be chosen to correspond to the amplitude and phase of targets at a specific
predetermined distance according to the above equation. The antenna 25, circulator
24, coupler 27, mixer 26 and filter 30, operate in an identical manner to the operation
of the antenna 21, circulator 20, coupler 15, mixer 34 and filter 35, respectively.
However, the horizontally polarised antenna 25 is responsive only to the horizontal
signal component of the received signal, and therefore the output signal E
h(t) of the filter 30 will correspond to the amplitude and phase of the horizontal
signal component of the reflected FM signal. The output signals of the filters 35
and 30 may be represented by the equations E
v(t)=A
v(t) sin (ωt+ϕ
v(t)) and E
h(t)=A
h(t) sin (ωt+ϕ
h(t)), respectively, where A
h(t) equals the amplitude of the received signals horizontally polarised component,
A
v(t) equals the amplitude of the received signals vertically polarised component, ω=2πΔf,
ϕ
v(t)=the phase angle of the vertically polarised component, and ϕ
h(t) equals the phase angle of the horizontally polarised component. Both ϕ
v(t) and ϕ
h(t) are referenced to an arbitrary but unknown phase; however, it is the phase difference,
ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t) rather than the absolute phase of the received signals that is important to the
operation of the detector.
[0012] It will be recognised by those skilled in the art that reflections from a target,
illuminated with a polarised wave, regardless of how complicated, will be far less
depolarised than reflections from any surrounding clutter.
[0013] If a linear FMCW radar signal is incident on a target, the polarisation of the return
signal cannot, in general, be described in the same way as for a monochromatic signal.
Since it is commonly the case that the target response depends on the frequency of
the illuminating signal, which is a linear function of time for FMCW radar, the polarisation
transforming characteristics of the target will be time dependent. The reflected electromagnetic
wave component amplitudes and phases therefor, will also be time dependent and can
be written as follows:


If the bandwidth of the received time dependent functions A
h(t), A
v(t), ϕ
h(t) and ϕ
v(t) is small when compared with ω
o, then E
h(t) and E
v(t) are said to be quasimonochromatic or narrow band. The polarisation of a quasimonochromatic
signal cannot be defined in terms of time independent component amplitudes and relative
phases as in the monochromatic case. Either a time dependent polarisation or an average
polarisation must be considered. In the present detector, the latter approach is taken
and polarisation is defined in terms of the average quantities known as Stokes parameters,
which were first introduced to describe the polarisation of optical frequency signals.
[0014] The Stokes parameters are average quantities, estimates of which can be generated
from the received components of a quasimonochromatic plane wave. The actual Stokes
parameters are defined in terms of the amplitudes A
h(t) and A
v(t), and the phases ϕ
h(t) and ϕ
v(t) of the signals given in equations (2) and (3), as follows:




where E [·] denotes an ensemble average. Under ergodic conditions, assumed here, ensemble
averages may be approximated by time average, which are denoted by the symbol
<->. The use of time averaging will permit the determination of good estimates of the
Stokes parameters, and will be used hereinafter.
[0015] In the above, so is the sum of the envelopes of the h and v plane wave E-field components
and physically represents the total intensity of power of the received signal; s
1, s
2 and s
3, as opposed to being sum quantities, are difference quantities; s, is the difference
between the intensities of the h and v E-field components, while s
2 is the difference in the intensities of two orthogonal E-field components whose axes
are rotated 45° relative to the h and v axes components used to calculate so and s,.
The quantity s
3, which can be shown to be equal to the difference between the intensities of the
right hand circular and the left hand circular component E-field components, may be
determined from the product of the h and v field components when the phase angle of
the v component has been shifted by π/2 relative to the h component. Because of the
π/2 phase shift of one component, s
3 is a measure of the circularly polarised power of the received signal.
[0016] A target that returns a circularly polarised signal will have all of its information
in s
3, because s, and s
2, which measures differences in linear polarisation signals, are zero. Since the phase
difference between the components used to calculate s
1 and s
2 is zero, it may be expected that a target whose reflected signal is linearly polarised
will have all its information in s, and s
2, while s
3 will be zero.
[0017] It is possible to choose detection criteria that are functions of the received signal,
and can be applied to a simple threshold device to detect faithfully the presence
of a target in a clutter environment. Using such detection criteria, a threshold may
be chosen for a specified probability of false alarm (P
fa). Certain detection criteria (e.g. degree of polarisation and s
3/s
o), enable a constant false alarm rate (CFAR) for arbitrarily chosen power levels,
to be achieved.
[0018] Various detection criteria can be used. One such detection criterion is the degree
of polarisation. For a real target, such as tank or an airplane, s
1, s
2 and s
3 will all be, in general, non-zero, i.e., the reflected signal need not be circularly
or linearly polarised. It can be elliptically polarised or need not be polarised at
all. A quasimonochromatic signal can be unpolarised or partially polarised. With the
use of Stokes parameters, it is possible to describe the state of polarisation of
a signal reflected from an irregularly shaped object. This may be done with the aid
of a quantity P, called the degree of polarisation. The degree of polarisation, defined
in terms of the Stokes parameters is:

Physically it is the ratio of the polarised power in the received signal to the total
power in the received signal. It is therefore a real number whose range is the interval
zero to one. When P=0, the signal is said to be unp
plarised while, when P=1, it is said to be completely polarised. A signal whose Stokes
parameters produce a Pε (0, 1) is said to be partially polarised.
[0019] Detection criteria such as s
3/s
o and s
o+s
3 may be employed to establish a detection threshold. Those skilled in the art will
recognise that many other detection criteria having the Stokes parameters as their
basis, are possible.
[0020] It should be noted that strictly monochromatic radar signals could also be transmitted
and the Stokes parameters of the reflected wave determined.
[0021] It should also be noted that while FMCW radar is proposed for use in the preferred
embodiment of Figures 1 a and 1 b, those skilled in the art will appreciate that pulsed
radar may be successfully used to provide the quasimonochromatic signals needed to
minimise the effects of clutter.
[0022] Referring again to Figure 1, the processor 12 is used to estimate the Stokes parameters
from the signals applied to the input terminals 12a and 12b. Considering the parameters
s
o and s
1, the signals available at the input terminal 12a corresponding to the vertically
polarised signal, and at the input terminal 12b corresponding to the horizontally
polarised signals are coupled to the respective squaring circuits 37 and 38. The output
signal of the squaring circuit 37 will be equal to A
v2(t) and the output signal of the squaring circuit 38 will equal A
h2(t). In practice, each detector and its associated squaring circuit may be realised
by a square law detector. The output signal of the squaring circuit 37 is then coupled
to the integrator 40 which integrates the A
v2(t) term over time yielding <A
v2(t)>. Likewise, the output signal of the squaring circuit 38 is coupled to the integrator
32, the output signal of which will equal <A
h2(t)> corresponding to the integration of A
h2(t) over time. Since the signal reflected from clutter tends to be randomly polarised,
an increase in integration overtime will reduce the random effects of the clutter
in estimating the Stokes parameters.
[0023] The outputs of the integrators 40 and 32 are added in the summer 33, whose output
signal will then equal <A
v2(t)>+<A
h2(t)>=s
o. Additionally, the output signal of the integrator 40 is subtracted from the output
signal of the integrator 32, in the subtractor 41, to yield the Stokes parameter estimate
s
1=A
v2(t) >-<A
h2(t) >.
[0024] Stokes parameter s
2 is estimated as follows. The signals from transceiver output terminals 11 a and 11b
are multiplied in the multiplier 42, yielding the product A
h(t) sin (ω+ϕ
h(t)) A
v(t) sin (ωt+ϕ
v(t))=1/2 A
v(t) A
h(t) [cos (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t))-cos (2ωt+ϕ
v(t)+ϕ
h(t))]. The filter 43 filters out the term cos (2ωt+ϕ
v(t)+ϕ
h(t)), and the remaining term 1/2 A
v(t) A
h(t) cos (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t)) is then multiplied by a factor of 4 in the amplifier 44 to yield the expression
2 A
v(t) A
h(t) cos (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t)), which is related to the Stokes parameter s
2, previously defined in equation (6). The output signal from the amplifier 44 is then
applied to the integrator 45 which performs the same function as the integrators 40
and 32.
[0025] The estimation of Stokes parameter s
3 is performed in a manner similar to the estimation of s
2. The signal E
v=A
v(t) sin (ωt+ϕ
v(t)) available at the input terminal 12a is applied to the phase shifter 46, the signal
resulting being A
v(t) sin (ωt+ϕ
v(t)+π/2) which is equal to A
v(t) cos (ωt+ϕ
v(t)). The output signals of the phase shifter 46 and the filter 30 are multiplied
in the multiplier 50 to yield the product A
h(t) A
v(t)/2 [sin (2ωt+ϕ
h(t)+ϕ
v(t))+sin (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t))], which is then coupled to the filter 51 which filters out the term [sin (2ωt+ϕ
h(t)+ϕ
v(t))]. After amplification in the amplifier 52, the signal that results is equal to
2 A
v(t) A
h(t) (sin (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t)). Once again the signals are applied to the integrator 53 which performs the same
function as the integrators 32, 40 and 45, and the resulting output <2 A
v(t) A
h(t) sin (ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t))> is equal to time averaged estimate of the Stokes parameters S
3.
[0026] The resulting estimated Stokes parameters s
o, s
1, s
2 and s
3 can then be applied to the input terminals 54a, 54b, 54c and 54d, respectively, of
the threshold detector 54 wherein the four Stokes parameters may be analysed in accordance
with the detection criteria selected, compared with a predetermined threshold level,
and a decision made concerning the nature of the illuminated object. The outcome of
such decision is then displayed on the indicator means 55.
[0027] Referring to Figures 3a and 3b, the second embodiment of detector comprises a transceiver
111, an amplitude modification circuit 112, a processor 1 13, a threshold detector
114, and an indicator 115. The transceiver 111 includes a frequency modulated continuous
wave (FMCW) transmitter 116 coupled via a directional coupler 123 to an attenuator
117 which is in turn coupled to an antenna 120 via a directional coupler 122 and a
circulator 118. The antenna 120 is also coupled to a mixer 121 via the circulator
118, the mixer 121 being further coupled to the attenuator 117 via the directional
coupler 122. The FMCW transmitter 116 is also coupled to a phase shifter 124 via the
directional coupler 123 which is in turn coupled to an antenna 127 via an attenuator
125 and a circulator 126. The antenna 127 is coupled via the circulator 126 to a mixer
130 which is in turn coupled to the FMCW transmitter 116 via the directional couplers
131 and 123. The output terminals of the mixer 121 and the mixer 130 are coupled respectively
to transceiver output terminals 111 a and 111 b.
[0028] The signal modification circuit 112 includes in its preferred embodiment a cosine
generator 132 coupled to an input terminal 133a of a multiplier 133, an input terminal
133b thereof being coupled to the signal modification circuit input terminal 112a.
The output terminal 133c of the multiplier 33 is coupled to the signal modification
circuit output terminal 112c. A sine generator 134 is coupled to an input terminal
135a of a multiplier 135, another input terminal 135b of which is coupled to the signal
modification circuit input terminal 112b via a phase shifter 136, the output terminal
135c of the multiplier 135 being coupled to signal modification circuit output terminal
112d.
[0029] Referring now to Figure 4, the signal modification circuit 112 may alternatively
comprise an attenuator 147 coupled to the input terminal 112b via a phase shifter
146, the output terminal of the attenuator 147 being coupled to signal modification
circuit output terminal 112d. The input terminal of an attenuator 150 is coupled to
a movable arm 149a of a switch 149, which has input terminals 149b and 149c coupled
to modification circuit input terminal 112a and an output terminal of an inverter
148, respectively. The input terminal of the inverter 148 is coupled to the input
terminal 112a, the output terminal of the attenuator 150 being coupled to modification
circuit output terminal 112c.
[0030] Referring again to Figures 3a and 3b, the processor 113 includes a summer 140 having
respective input terminals coupled to the processor input terminals 113a and 1136.
The output terminal of the summer 140 is coupled to a narrow band filter 141 which
in turn is coupled to an amplitude detector 142, the output terminal of which is coupled
to a squaring circuit 143. The output terminal of the squaring circuit 143 is coupled
to an integrator 144, the output terminal thereof being coupled to a computer 145
which is in turn coupled to the indicator 115 through the threshold detector 114.
[0031] In a manner similar to that of the first embodiment, the transceiver 111 performs
the functions of both dual input receiver and a dual output transmitter. The FMCW
transmitter 116 generates a linear FM signal that is coupled to antennae 120 and 127
which have polarisations that are substantially orthogonal to each other. For the
purposes of discussion, the antenna 120 will be considered vertically polarised and
the antenna 127 horizontally polarised. Those skilled in the art, however, will appreciate
that the polarisation vectors need not be limited to vertical and horizontal. The
relative phase and amplitude of the signal applied to the vertically polarised antenna
120 and the horizontally polarised antenna 127 may be varied, allowing the user to
transmit a signal with any elliptical polarisation desired. It should be noted that
many different antenna and signal configurations may be used and that the configuration
described is but one of these many configurations. The FMCW transmitter 116 generates
a linear FM signal with a time duration T that exceeds the round trip time delay At
required for the signal to be transmitted from the antennae 120 and 127, reflected
from the target, and received by the antennae 120 and 127. This linear FMCW signal
is coupled to the vertically polarised antenna 120 via the attenuator 117, directional
couplers 122 and 123, and circulator 118, and to the horizontally polarised antenna
127 via directional couplers 123 and 131, phase shifter 124, attenuator 125 and circulator
126. The attenuators 117 and 125 are used to vary the amplitude of the signal applied
to vertically polarised antenna 120 and horizontally polarised antenna 127, respectively.
The linear FM signal coupled to the horizontally polarised antenna 127 may be shifted
in phase by the phase shifter 124 to provide a phase difference between the signals
coupled to the antennae 120 and 127. This phase difference and the amplitude ratio
provided by the attenuators 117 and 125 may be chosen such that horizontal and vertical
components of the transmitted wave establish any desired elliptical polarisation.
It should be noted that linear and circular polarisations are merely special cases
of elliptical polarisation.
[0032] The antennae 120 and 127 will be responsive to the vertically and horizontally polarised
components, respectively, of a signal reflected from a target. Considering the reception
of the vertically polarised signal first, the antenna 120 will be excited by the vertically
polarised signal component of the reflected linear FM signal, which through the circulator
118 is coupled to the mixer 121, to which a portion of the transmitted linear FM signal
is coupled via the directional coupler 122. The signals coupled to the mixer 121 are
heterodyned therein to provide a signal

, which corresponds to the amplitude and phase of the vertical signal component and
whose centre frequency is a function of the time delay between the transmitted and
received signal, as will be explained. Figure 2 applies to the second embodiment also.
That is to say Figure 2 shows the frequency versus time characteristic of the transmitted
signal 60 generated by the FMCW transmitter 116 and the signal 61 reflected from the
illuminated target as they appear at the input terminals of the mixer 121. The time
delay At is the time required for the transmitted signal to propagate through space
from the antenna 120, reflect back from the illuminated target and be received by
the antenna 120. Thus, if the transmitted signal 60 begins at time to, the reflected
signal will not appear at the input to the mixer 121 until time t,, where t
1-t
o=Δt. Since the transmitted and consequently the reflected signal have a linear frequency
versus time characteristic, there will be a constant frequency difference Δf between
the transmitted signal 60 and reflected signal 61. The mixer 121 will produce both
sum and difference frequencies of which either frequency may be selected. The antenna
127, circulator 126, directional coupler 131, and mixer 130 operate in an identical
manner to the operation of antenna 120, circulator 118, coupler 122 and mixer 121,
respectively. The horizontally polarised antenna 127, however, is responsive only
to the horizontal signal component of the received signal; therefore, the output signal

of the mixer 130 will correspond to the amplitude and phase of the horizontal signal
component of the reflected FM signal. The output signal of the mixers 121 and 130
may be represented by the equations


where A
h(t) equals the amplitude of the received signal's horizontally polarised component,
A
v(t) equals the amplitude of the received signal's vertically polarised component,
ω=2πΔf,ϕ
v(t)= the phase angle of the vertically polarised component, ϕ
h(t) equals the phase angle of the horizontally polarised component, and the superscript
r denotes the real component of the complex quantities E
h(t) and E
v(t). Both ϕ
v(t) and ϕ
h(t) are referenced to an arbitrary but unknown phase, since it is the phase difference,
ϕ
h(t)-ϕ
v(t), rather than the absolute phase of the received signals that is important to the
operation of the detector.
[0033] It should be recognized by those skilled in the art that reflections from a target,
illuminated with a polarised wave, regardless of how complicated, will be far less
depolarised than reflections from any surrounding clutter.
[0034] If a linear FMCW radar signal is incident on a target, the polarisation of the return
signal cannot, in general, be described in the same way as for a monochromatic signal.
Since it is commonly the case that the target response depends on the frequency of
the illuminating signal, which is a linear function of time for FMCW radar, the polarisation
transforming characteristics of the target will be time dependent. The reflected electromagnetic
wave component amplitudes and phases, therefore, will also be time dependent and can
be written as follows:


If the bandwidth of the received time dependent functions A
h(t), Ay(t), ϕ
h(t) and ϕ
v(t) is small when compared with ω
o, then Eh(t) & E
v(t) are said to be quasimonochromatic. Therefore, the polarisation of a quasimonochromatic
signal cannot be defined in terms of time independent component amplitudes and relative
phases as in the monochromatic case. Either a time dependent polarisation or an average
polarisation must be considered. In the present embodiment, the latter approach is
taken and polarisation is defined in terms of the averaged quantities known as Stokes
parameters, which were first introduced to describe the polarisation of optical frequency
signals.
[0035] As previously mentioned, the Stokes parameters are average quantities, estimates
of which can be generated from the received components of a quasimonochromatic plane
wave. The actual Stokes parameters are defined as follows in terms of the amplitudes
A
h(t) and A"(t), and the phase angles, ϕ
h(t) and ϕ
v(t) of the signals given in equations 9 and 10:



where E [·] denotes an ensemble average. Under ergodic conditions, assumed here, ensemble
averages may be approximated by time averages, which are denoted by the symbol <.
>. The use of time averaging will permit the determination of good estimates of the
Stokes parameters, and will be used hereinafter.
[0036] In equation (11), so is the sum of the envelopes of the vand v plane wave E-field
components and physically represents the total intensity of power or the received
signal. s
1, s
2, and s
3, as opposed to being sum quantities, are difference quantities. s
1 is the differencebetween the intensities of the h and v E-field components, while
s
2 is the difference in the intensities of two orthogonal E-field components whose axes
are rotated 45° relative to the h and v axes. The quantity s
3, which can be shown to be equal to the difference between the intensities of the
right hand circular and the left hand circular components of the E-field, may be determined
from the product of the h and v field components when the phase angle of the v component
has been phase shifted by π/2 relative to the h component.
[0037] A target that returns a circularly polarised signal will have all of its information
in s
3, because s, and s
2, which measure differences in linear polarisation signals, are zero. Since the phase
difference between the components used to calculate s, and s
2 is zero, it may be expected that a target whose reflected signal is linearly polarised
will have all its information in s, and s
2, while s
3 will be zero.
[0038] The Stokes parameters may be established by measuring the time averaged radiation
intensity of the signal reflected from a target under various measurement conditions.
If the vertical component is subjected to a phase shift ε with respect to the horizontal
component, the result may be denoted by the expression E
v(t)eiε. If we further consider the electric field, E(t;θ,ε), as the vector sum of
the electric field components E
h(t) and E
v(t), in a direction which makes an angle 0, called the polarisation angle, with respect
to the positive horizontal direction, we see with the aid of Figure 5, that

The time averaged radiation intensity, I (θ,ε), may be determined from the measured
complex electric field intensities such that

Examination of this expression reveals that by varying the quantities 0 and ε one
obtains the time averaged radiation intensity I(O,
E) as a function of 0 and
E. It will be appreciated, that if appropriate pairings of 0 and
E, hereinafter referred to as measurement pairs (θ,ε), are chosen, the Stokes parameters
of the received electromagnetic signal may be obtained from the radiation intensity,
|(θ,ε) determined from these pairings. One can, for example, choose the six measurement
pairs, (θ,ε); (0°, 0) (45°, 0), (90°, 0) (135°, 0), (45°, π/2), and (135°, π/2), which
will allow one to accumulate data as shown in the table in Figure 6.
[0040] It is possible to choose detection criteria which are functions of the received signal,
and can be applied to a simple threshold device to faithfully detect the presence
of a target in a clutter environment. Using such detection criteria, a threshold may
be chosen for a specified probability of false alarm (P
fa). Certain detection criteria (e.g. degree of polarisation and s
3/s
o discussed below) provide constant false alarm rate (CFAR) for arbitrary clutter power
levels.
[0041] Various detection criteria can be used. One such detection criterion is the degree
of polarisation. For a real target, such as a tank or an airplane, s
1, s
2 and s
3 will all be, in general, non-zero, i.e., the reflected signal need not be circularly
or linearly polarised. It can be elliptically polarised or need not be polarised at
all. A quasimonochromatic signal can be unpolarised or partially polarised. With the
use of Stokes parameters, it is possible to describe the state of polarisation of
a signal reflected from an irregularly shaped object. This may be done with the aid
of a quantity P, called the degree of polarisation. The degree of polarisation defined
in terms of the Stokes parameters is:

Physically it is the ratio of the polarised power in the received signal to the total
power in the received signal. It is therefore a real number whose range is the interval
zero to one. When P=O, the signal is said to be unpolarised while, when P=1, it is
said to be completely polarised. A signal whose Stokes parameters produce a PE(0,
1) is said to be partially polarised.
[0042] Detection criteria such as s
3/s
o and s
°+s
3 may be employed to establish a detection threshold. Those skilled in the art will
recognise that many other detection criteria having the Stokes parameters as their
basis, are possible.
[0043] It should be noted strictly monochromatic radar signals could also be transmitted
and the Stokes parameters of the reflected wave determined.
[0044] It should also be noted that while FMCW radar is proposed for use in the embodiment
of Figures 3a and 3b, those skilled in the art will appreciate that pulsed radar may
be successfully used to provide the quasimonochromatic signals needed to minimise
the effects of clutter.
[0045] Referring again to Figures 3a and 3b, the signal modification circuit 112 is used
to multiply the amplitude of the representative signals E
"(t) and E
h(t) applied to the signal modification circuit input terminals 112a and 112b, respectively,
by signals generated in the cosine generator 132 and the sine generator 134, respectively.
These functions are chosen in accordance with the previously discussed angles for
0 as illustrated in Figure 6. Thus, the output signal available from the cosine generator
132 and the sine generator 134 will change according to the angle 9 of the measurement
pair (θ,ε) chosen. Additionally, the signal modification circuit 112 contains the
phase shifter 136 which is coupled to the input terminal 112b and which will phase
shift the signal E
h(t) by an amount ε as previously discussed and shown in Figure 6. Thus, by varying
the phase shift ε provided by the phase shifter 136, and the functions generated by
the cosine generator 132 and the sine generator 134, it is possible to determine measurement
pairs for the purpose of establishing the Stokes parameters as described in equations
(13) to (16). The signal modification circuit may alternatively be as shown in Figure
4. The phase shifter 146 performs the same function as the phase shifter 136. The
attenuators 147 and 150, inverter 148 and switch 149 are adjusted such that they will
modify the amplitude of the representative and phase shifted signals in accordance
with the polarisation angle 0 and the sines and cosines thereof. For example, measurement
pair number 1 in Figure 6 calls for a polarisation angle B=0; the value of the cosine
and sine of 0° are 1 and 0, respectively. Thus, by adjusting the attenuator 147 to
provide zero attenuation, the amplitude of the phase shifted representative signal
will be unchanged, or effectively multiplied by a factor of 1. The attenuator 150
would be adjusted to highly attenuate the signal coupled to its input terminal so
that a substantially zero level signal is coupled to its output terminal, and thus
have the effect of multiplying the representative signal substantially by zero. As
a further example, consider measurement pair number 3 wherein the polarisation angle
0 is to be set to 45°, the sine and cosine of which equal

or approximately .707. Adjustment of the attenuators 147 and 150 such that the signal
available at the output terminals is attenuated to equal 70.7% of the signal applied
to their input terminals effectively multiplies the signal available at the input
terminal by a factor of .707. The inverter 148 and the switch 149 may be operated
in conjunction with the attenuator 150 to provide cosine values that are negative.
For example, measurement pairs 4 and 6, as shown in Figure 6, require the generation
of the cosine of the polarisation angle θ=135° which equals

or approximately -.707. The attenuator 150, by itself, can only provide attenuation
of the incoming representative signal so that it equals 70.7% of its original value;
the attenuator cannot, however, provide the inversion necessary to obtain a value
of -.707. In such an instance, the switch 149 may be positioned to couple the attenuator
150 to the inverter 148, which effectively multiplies the signal received by the attenuator
150 by -1. When the inverter 148 is not needed, the switch 149 may be positioned so
that the inverter 148 is by-passed.
[0046] The summer 140 has input terminals 113a and 113b coupled respectively to output terminals
112c and 1 12d so that the amplitude modified and phase shifted representative signals
received from signal modification circuit terminals 112c and 112d are summed therein
to provide an output signal

This signal is coupled to the input of the filter 141, which may be a narrow band
filter that can be adjusted to different centre frequencies and thereby function as
a range gate.
[0047] As previously described, the frequency Δf produced by the mixer 121 or 130 is dependent
upon the distance d the transmitted signal must travel before it is reflected and
received by the antenna 120 or 127, respectively, and can be expressed as follows:

where
d=the distance between the antenna and the illuminated target.
Af=the difference between the transmitted and received signal frequencies.
BW=the bandwidth of the transmitted linear FM signal.
c=free space propagation velocity.
T=the period of the linear FM signal.
Thus, by adjusting the centre frequency F
c of the filter 141 to pass only a certain limited band of frequencies centred at Δf,
the filter output signal E(t; θε) may be chosen to correspond to the amplitude and
phase of targets at a specific predetermined distance according to equation (18).
[0048] The detector 142 is coupled to the output terminal of the filter 141 and determines
the amplitude of signals applied to its input terminal such that the signal available
at its output terminal equals the signal |E(t;θ,ε)|, which signal is then coupled
to the input terminal of the squaring circuit 143. The output signal of the squaring
circuit 143 will be equal to |E(t;θ,ε)|
2. In practice, the amplitude detector 142 and the squaring circuit 143 may be realised
by a square law detector. It should be appreciated that the output signal available
from the squaring circuit 143 will be representative of the radiation intensity of
the received signal for the measurement conditions selected as previously described
in equation (12). This radiation intensity representative signal may then be integrated
in the integrator 144 to yield the term I(θ,ε). Since the signal reflected from clutter
tends to be randomly polarised, an increase in the integration time will reduce the
variance of the Stokes parameter estimates.
[0049] The output signals available from the integrator 144 may then be combined in computer
145 in accordance with equations (13) to (16) to yield the estimated Stokes parameters
so, s
1, s
2 and s
3. These resulting estimated Stokes parameters may be compared in the threshold detector
114 to a predetermined threshold such that the four estimated Stokes parameters may
be analysed in accordance with the detection criteria selected and a decision made
concerning the nature of the illuminated object. The outcome of such decision may
then be displayed on the indicator 115.
1. A radar polarisation detector comprising receiving means (1 1, 21, 25) adapted
to receive electromagnetic signals having a plurality of signal components each having
non-identical predetermined polarisations for providing signals representative of
the received signal components and processor means (12) coupled to the receiving means
for processing the representative signals, characterised in that the processor means
(12) are operable to establish estimates of the Stokes parameters (so, s,, S2, S3) corresponding to the polarisation of the signals and for providing signals representative
of the estimates of the Stokes parameters (so, s,, s2, S3) and means (54) coupled to the processor means for comparing the signals representative
of the estimates of the Stokes parameters (so, s1, s2, S3) with predetermined threshold signals and for providing signals indicative of the
signals representative of the estimates of Stokes parameters (so, s" s2, S3) having a signal level greater than the respective threshold signals.
2. A detector according to claim 1, charac- teried in that the receiving means comprise
first antenna means (25) responsive to a first predetermined polarisation component
of said electromagnetic signals; second antenna means (21) responsive to a second
polarisation component of said electromagnetic signals substantially orthogonal to
said first predetermined polarisation and the receiving means further comprise generator
means (13) for generating linear frequency modulated signals; means for coupling said
generator means (13) to said first and second antenna means (25, 21) whereby a linear
FM signal is transmitted from and received by said first and second antenna means;
and first and second mixer means (26, 34) coupled respectively to said first and second
antenna means and to said generator means for mixing a portion of said generated linear
FM signals and said received linear FM signals to provide first and second signals
representative of said first and second polarisation signal components, said representative
signals being coupled to said processor means (12).
3. A detector according to claim 2, characterised in that the receiving means further
include first and second frequency selection means (30, 35) coupled to receive said
representative signals from said first and second mixer means (26, 34) respectively
for selecting signals within a predetermined band.
4. A detector according to claim 2 or 3, characterised in that the receiving means
further include first means (22) coupled between said generator means (13) and said
first antenna means (25) for phase shifting signals.
5. A detector according to claim 2, 3 or 4, characterised in that the receiving means
further include means (14) coupled between said generator means (13) and said first
and second antenna means (25, 21) for varying the power coupled thereto.
6. A detector according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that the
processor means (12) comprise first and second detecting means (31, 36) coupled to
said receiving means for determining the amplitude of first and second representative
signals received from said receiving means; first and second squaring means (38, 37)
coupled respectively to said first and second detecting means (31, 36) for squaring
signals received from said first and second detecting means (31, 36) and providing
first and second squared signals; subtracting means (41) coupled to said first and
second squaring means (38, 37) for subtracting said second squared signals from said
first squared signal; summing means (33) coupled to said first and second squaring
means (38, 37) for summing said first and second squared signals; first multiplier
means (42) coupled to said receiving means for multiplying said first representative
signal by said second representative signal; second phase shifting means (46) coupled
to said receiving means for phase shifting said second representative signal by 90
degrees; second multiplier means (50) coupled to said second phase shifting means
(46) and further coupled to said receiving means for multiplying the signals from
said second phase shifting means by said first representative signal; and first amplifier
means (44) coupled to said first multiplier means (42) for amplifying the output of
the latter, and second amplifier means (52) coupled to said second multiplier means
(50) for amplifying the output of the latter.
7. A detector according to claim 6, characterised in that the processor means (12)
further include: third frequency selection means (43) coupled between said first multiplier
means (42) and said first amplifier means (44) for selecting frequencies within a
predetermined band, and fourth frequency selection means (51) coupled between said
second multiplier means (50) and said second amplifier means (52) for selecting frequencies
within a predetermined band.
8. A detector according to claim 6 or 7, characterised in that the processor means
(12) further include: first integrator means (32) coupled between said first squaring
means (38) and said summing and subtracting means for integrating signals; second
integrator means (40) coupled between said second squaring means (37) and said summing
and subtracting means for integrating signals; third integrator means (45) coupled
to said first amplifier means (44) for integrating signals; and fourth integrator
means (53) coupled to said second amplifier means (52) for integrating signals.
9. A radar target polarisation detector comprising: receiving means (111, 120, 127)
for receiving electromagnetic signals having a plurality of signal components each
having non-identical predetermined polarisations, and processor means (113) coupled
to the receiving means (111, 120, 127) for processing the received signals, characterised
in that the detector further comprises modifying means (112) coupled to said receiving
means (111, 120, 127) for modifying said received signals in accordance with preselected
polarisation angles and relative phase shifts for providing modified representative
signals, the processor means (113) being coupled to the signal modifying means for
processing said modified representative signals to establish estimates of the Stokes
parameters (so, s" s2, S3 corresponding to said polarisation of said received signals and for providing signals
representative of said estimates of the Stokes parameters (so, s" s2, s3), and means coupled to said processor means for comparing said Stokes parameter representative
signals with predetermined threshold signals.
10. A detector according to any of the preceding claims, characterised in that the
received electromagnetic signals are quasimonochromatic.
11. A detector according to claim 9 or 10, characterised in that the receiving means
comprise: first antenna means (127) responsive to a first predetermined polarisation
component of said electromagnetic signals; second antenna means (120) responsive to
a second polarisation component of said electromagnetic signals substantially orthogonal
to said first predetermined polarisation, and the receiving means further comprise:
means (116) for generating linear frequency modulated signals; means for coupling
said generating means to said first and second antenna means (127, 120) whereby a
linear FM signal is transmitted from and received by said first and second antenna
means; and first and second mixer means (130, 121) coupled respectively to said first
and second antenna means (127, 120) and further coupled to said generator means (116)
for mixing a portion of said generated linear FM signals and said received linear
FM signals, to provide first and second signals representative of said first and second
polarisation signal components, said representative signals being coupled to said
signal modifying means (112).
12. A detector according to claim 11, characterised in that the signal modifying means
(112) comprise: first and second input terminal means (1126, 112a); means (136) coupled
to said first input terminal means for delaying said first representative signal;
means (134) for generating signals representative of the sine of preselected polarisation
angles; first multiplier means (135) coupled to said sine generator and said delaying
means for multiplying said delayed signals by said sine representative signals; means
(132) for generating signals representative of the cosine of said preselected polarisation
angles; and second multiplier means (133) coupled to said cosine generator and said
second input terminal means for multiplying said second representative signals by
said cosine representative signals.
13. A detector according to any of claims 9 to 12 characterised in that the signal
modifying means comprise: first and second input terminal means (1126, 112a); first
and second output terminal means (112d, 112c); means (146) coupled to said first input
terminal means (112b) for delaying a first received signal; first attenuator means
(147) coupled between the delaying means (146) and said first output terminal means
(112d) for varying the amplitude of said delayed signals; means (148) coupled to said
second input terminal means (112a) for inverting a second received signal; second
attenuator means (150) for varying the amplitude of signals applied thereto; and means
(149) coupled to the inverting means (148) for switchably coupling an inverted attenuated
signal and a non-inverted attenuated signal to said output terminal means of said
signal modifying means.
14. A detector according to claim 9, characterised in that the processor means (113)
comprise: means (140) coupled to said signal modifying means for summing said modified
representative signals; detecting means (142) coupled to the summing means (140) for
determining the amplitude of said summed signals; means (143) coupled to said detecting
means (142) for squaring signals received from said detecting means to provide intensity
representative signals; and computation means (145) coupled to said squaring means
(143) for establishing signals representative of the estimates of the Stokes parameters
(so, s1, s2, S3) from said intensity representative signals.
15. A detector according to claim 14, characterised by further including: means (141)
coupled between the summing means (140) and the detecting means (142) for selecting
signals at frequencies within a predetermined band.
16. A detector according to claim 14, characterised by further comprising: means (144)
coupled between said squaring means (143) and said computation means (145) for integrating
said intensity representative signals.
17. A method of detecting the presence of a radar target immersed in clutter comprising
the steps of: illuminating said radar target with electromagnetic radiation to provide
a signal reflected from said target; receiving electromagnetic radiation signal components
of the reflected signal having predetermined non-identical polarisations; providing
signals representative of the signal components; and processing said representative
signals, characterised in that the processing step is such as to establish estimates
of the Stokes parameters (so, s1, s2, s3) corresponding to the polarisation of said signal components and provide signals
representative of said representative of the estimates of the Stokes parameters and
in that the method comprises the further step of comparing said signals representative
of the estimates of the Stokes parameters with predetermined threshold signals to
provide signals indicative of said signals representative of the estimates of the
Stokes parameters (so, s1, s2, s3) having a signal level greater than said threshold signals.
18. A method according to claim 17, characterised in that the received signal components
comprise: first signal components of said reflected signal having a first predetermined
polarisation; and second signal components of said reflected signal having a second
predetermined polarisation substantially orthogonal to said first predetermined polarisation.
19. A method according to claim 17 or 18, characterised in that the step of processing
comprises the steps of: detecting the amplitude Ah(t) of a first representative signal; detecting the amplitude Av(t) of a second representative signal; squaring the first and second amplitude detected
signals to provide first and second squared signals; subtracting said second squared
signal from said first squared signal to determine the signal Ah2(t)-Av2(t); adding said first and second squared signals to determine the signal Ah2(t)+Av2(t): phase shifting said second representative signal by 90 degrees, multiplying said
phase shifted signal by said first representative signal, filtering the product of
said first representative signal and said phase shifted signal to select the term
of the product corresponding to the sine of the phase difference of the first and
second signal components; amplifying said sine term by a factor p of four whereby
the signal Ah(t) Av(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕ(t)) is determined; multiplying the first and second representative signals;
filtering the product of said first and second representative signal to select the
terms of the product corresponding to the cosine of the phase difference of the first
and second signals; and amplifying said cosine term by a factor of four, whereby the
signal Ah(t) Av(t) cos (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) is determined.
20. A method according to claim 19, characterised by further comprising the step of:
integrating the signals Ah2(t), Av2(t), Ah(t)Av(t) cos (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) and Ah(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)).
21. A method of detecting the presence of a radar target immersed in clutter comprising
the steps of: illuminating said radar target with at least two electromagnetic signals
having non-identical polarisations; receiving electromagnetic signal components of
reflected signals from said target having non-identical polarisations; and processing
the received signals, characterised in that the method comprises the further steps
of modifying said received signals in accordance with preselected phase shifts and
polarisation angles to provide modified representative signals; processing said modified
representative signals to establish estimates of the Stokes parameters (so, s1, s2, s3) corresponding to the polarisation of said signal components and provide signals
representative of said estimates of the Stokes parameters; and comparing said signals
representative of the Stokes parameters to predetermined threshold signals.
22. A method according to any of claims 17 to 21, characterised in that said illuminating
and received electromagnetic radiation is quasimonochromatic.
23. A method according to claim 21, characterised in that the received signal components
comprise: a first signal component of said reflected signal having a first predetermined
polarisation; and a second signal component of said reflected signal having a second
predetermined polarisation substantially orthogonal to said first predetermined polarisation.
24. A method according to any of claims 21 to 23, characterised in that the step of
signal modifying comprises the steps of selecting polarsation angles 0 and phase shifts
E to establish a multiplicity of measurement pairs (θ,ε); phase shifting said first
signal component by one of said phase shifts ε; generating a signal representative
of the sine of said selected polarisation angle 0 paired with said one phase shift
ε; generating a signal representative of the cosine of said selected polarisation
angle 0 paired with said one phase shift ε; multiplying said delayed signal by said
sine representative signal; and multiplying said second signal component by said cosine
representative signal whereby first and second modified signals are provided.
25. A method according to any one of claims 21 to 23, characterised in that the signal
modifying step comprises the steps of: selecting polarisation angles 0 and phase shifts
ε to establish a multiplicity of measurement pairs (θ,ε); phase shifting said first
signal component by one of said phase shifts ε; attenuating the amplitude of said
delayed signal in accordance with the sine of said selected polarisation angle 0 paired
with said one phase shift E attenuating the amplitude of said second representative signal in accordance with
the cosine of said selected polarisation angle 0 paired with said one phase shift
ε; and inverting said second representative signal in accordance with the cosine of
said preselected polarisation angle 0 paired with said one phase shift ε, whereby
first and second modified signals are provided.
26. A method according to any one of claims 21 to 23, wherein the step of processing
is performed for the measurement pairs (0°, 0), (45°, 0), (90°, 0), (135°, 0), (45°,
π/2) and (135°, π/2).
27. A method according to claim 26, characterised in that the processing step comprises
the steps of: summing said first and second modified signals to provide a summed signal;
detecting the amplitude |E(t; θ, ε)| of said summed signal; squaring said summed signal
to provide intensity representative signals, 1(0, ε)=|E(t; θ,ε)|2 whereby the intensity representative signals, I(0°, 0), I(45°, 0) 1(90°, 0) 1(135°,
0) I(45°, π/2) and 1(135°, π/2) are established and further comprising the steps of
summing said intensity representative signal 1(0°, 0) and 1(90°, 0) to determine the
signal 1(0°, 0)+1(90°, 0); subtracting said intensity representative signal 1(90°,
0) from said intensity representative signal I(0°, 0) to determine the signal 1(0°,
0)-1(90°, 0); subtracting said intensity representative signal I(135°, 0) from said
intensity representative signal I(45°, 0) to determine the signal I(45°, 0)-I(135°,
0); and subtracting the intensity representative signal 1(135°, π/2) from the intensity
representative signal I(45°, π/2) to determine the signal I(45°, π/2)-I(135°, π/2).
28. A method according to claim 27, characterised by further comprising the step of
integrating the intensity representative signals whereby estimates of the Stokes parameters
s0, s1, s2, and s3 are obtained.
29. A method according to claim 28, characterised by further comprising the step of
filtering said summed signal.
1. Radar-Polarisationsdetektor mit Empfangseinrichtungen (11, 21, 25) zum Empfang
von elektromagnetischen Signalen mit einen Vielzahl von Signalkomponenten, die jeweils
nicht identische vorgegebene Polarisationen aufweisen, und zur Lieferung von Signalen,
die die empfangenen Signalkomponenten darstellen, und mit Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(12), die mit den Empfangseinrichtungen gekoppelt sind und die die empfangenen Signalkomponenten
darstellenden Signale verarbeiten, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
zur Ausbildung von Abschätzungen der der Polarisation der Signale entsprechenden Stokes'schen
Parameter (s0, s1, s2, s3) und zur Lieferung von Signalen betreibbar sind, die die Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen
Parameter (so, s1, s2, s3) darstellen, und daß Einrichtungen (54) mit den Verarbeitungseinrichtungen zum Vergleich
der die Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen Parameter (s0, s1, s2, s3) darstellenden Signale mit vorgegebenen Schwellwertsignalen und zur Lieferung von
Signalen gekoppelt sind, die diejenigen der die Abschätzungen der Stoke'schen Parameter
(s0, s1, s2, s3) darstellenden Signale anzeigen, die einen Signalpegel aufweisen, oder größer als
die jeweiligen Schwellwertsignale ist.
2. Detektor nach Anspruch 1, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Empfangseinrichtungen
erste Antenneneinrichtungen (25), die auf eine erste vorgegebene Polarisationskomponente
der elektrischen Signale ansprechen und Zweite Antenneneinrichtungen (21) aufweisen,
die auf eine zweite Polarisationskomponente der elektromagnetischen Signale ansprechen,
die im wesent- lichen orthogonal zu der ersten vorgegebenen Polarisation ist, daß die Empfangseinrichtungen
weiterhin Generatoreinrichtungen (13) zur Erzeugung von linearen frequenzmodulierten
Signalen, Einrichtungen zum Ankoppel der Generatoreinrichtungen (13) an die ersten
und zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen (25, 21), wobei ein lineares frequnzmoduliertes
Signal von den ersten und zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen ausgesandt und empfangen wird,
und erste und zweite Mischereinrichtungen (26, 34) aufweisen, die mit den ersten bzw.
zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen und den Generatoreinrichtungen gekoppelt sind, um einen
Teil der erzeugten linearen frequenzmodulierten Signale und der empfangenen linearen
frequenzmodulierten Signale zu mischen, um erste und zweite Signale zu liefern, die
die ersten und Zweiten Polarisationssignalkomponenten darstellen, und daß diese die
ersten und zweiten Polarisationssignalkomponenten darstellenden Signale mit den Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(12) gekoppelt sind.
3. Detektor nach Anspruch 2, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Empfangseinrichtungen
weiterhin erste und zweite Frequenzauswahleinrichtungen (30, 35) einschließen, die
zum Empfang der die die ersten und zweiten Polarisationssignalkomponenten darstellenden
Signale von den ersten bzw. zweiten Mischereinrichtungen (26, 34) angeschaltet sind,
um Signale innerhalb eines vorgegebenen Frequenzbandes auszuwählen.
4. Detektor nach Anspruch 2 oder 3, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Empfanseinrichtungen
weiterhin erste zwischen den Generatoreinrichtungen (13) und den ersten Antenneneinrichtungen
(25) eingeschaltete Einrichtungen (22) zum Phasenverschieben von Signalen einschließen.
5. Detektor nach Anspruch 2, 3 oder 4, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Empfangseinrichtungen
weiterhin zwischen den Generatoreinrichtungen (13) und den ersten und zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen
(25, 21) eingeschaltete Einrichtungen (14) zur Änderung der diesen zugeführten Leistung
einschließen.
6. Detektor nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die
Verarbeitungseinrichtungen (12) erste und zweite mit den Empfangseinrichtungen gekoppelte
Detektoreinrichtungen (31, 36) zur Bestimmung der Amplitude von ersten und zweiten
darstellenden Signalen, die von den Empfangseinrichtungen empfangen werden, erste
und zweite mit den ersten bzw. zweiten Detektoreinrichtungen (31, 36) gekoppelte Quadriereinrichtungen
(38, 37) zum Quadrieren von Signalen, die von den ersten und zweiten Detektoreinrichtungen
(31, 36) empfangen werden, und zur Lieferung erster und zweiter quadrierter Signale,
mit den ersten und zweiten Quadriereinrichtungen (38, 37) gekoppelte Subtrahiereinrichtungen
(41) zum Subtrahieren des zweiten quadrierten Signals von dem ersten quadrierten Signal,
mit den ersten und zweiten Quadriereinrichtungen (38, 37) gekoppelte Summiereinrichtungen
(33) zum Summieren der ersten und zweiten quadrierten Signale, erste mit den Empfangseinrichtungen
gekoppelte Multipliziereinrichtungen (42) zum Multiplizieren des ersten darstellenden
Signals mit dem zweiten darstellenden Signal, zweite mit den Empfangseinrichtungen
gekoppelte Phasenschiebereinrichtungen (46) zum Phasenverschieben des zweiten darstellenden
Signals um 90°, zweite mit den zweiten Phasenschiebereinrichtungen (46) sowie mit
den Empfangseinrichtungen gekoppelte Multipliziereinrichtungen (50) zum Multiplizieren
der Signale von den zweiten Phasenschiebereinrichtungen mit dem ersten darstellenden
Signal, erste mit den ersten Multipliziereinrichtungen (42) gekoppelte Verstärkereinrichtungen
(44) zum Verstärken des Ausganges der ersten Multipliziereinrichtungen, und zweite
mit den zweiten Multipliziereinrichtungen (50) gekoppelte Verstärkereinrichtungen
(52) zum Verstärken des Ausganges der zweiten Multipliziereinrichtungen (50) umfassen.
7. Detektor nach Anspruch 6, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(12) weiterhin dritte zwischen den ersten Verstärkereinrichtungen (42) und den ersten
Verstärkereinrichtungen (44) eingeschaltete Frequenzauswahleinrichtungen (43) zur
Auswahl von Frequenzen innerhalb eines vorgegebenen Bandes, und vierte, zwischen den
zweiten Multipliziereinrichtungen (50) und den zweiten Verstärkereinrichtungen (52)
eingeschaltete Frequenzauswahleinrichtungen (51) zur Auswahl von Frequenzen innerhalb
eines vorgegebenen Frequenzbandes einschließen.
8. Detektor nach Anspruch 6 oder 7, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(12) weiterhin erste zwischen den ersten Quadriereinrichtungen (38) und den Summier-und
Subtrahiereinrichtungen eingeschaltete Integratoreinrichtungen (32) zur Integration
von Signalen, zweite zwischen den zweiten Quadriereinrichtungen (37) und den Summier-und
Subtrahiereinrichtungen eingeschaltete Integratoreinrichtungen (40) zum Integrieren
von Signalen, dritte mit den ersten Verstärkereinrichtungen (44) gekoppelte Integratoreinrichtungen
(45) zur Integration von Signalen und vierte mut den zweiten Ve'r-stärkereinrichtungen
(52) gekoppelte Inte- . gratoreinrichtungen (53) zur Integration von Signalen einschließen.
9. Radar-Zielpolarisationsdetektor mit Empfangseinrichtungen (111, 120, 127) zum Empfang
von elektromagnetischen Signalen, die eine Vielzahl von Signalkomponenten aufweisen,
die jeweils nicht identische vorgegebene Polarisationen haben, und mit Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(113), die mit den Empfangseinrichtungen (111, 120, 127) zur Verarbeitung der empfangenen
Signale gekoppelt sind, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der Detektor weiterhin mit den
Empfangseinrichtungen (111, 120, 127) gekoppelte Modifikationseinrichtungen (112)
zur Modifikation der empfangenen Signale entsprechend vorher ausgewählter Polarisationswinkel
und relativer Phasenverschiebungen zur Lieferung von modifizierten darstellenden Signalen
aufweist, daß die Verarbeitungseinrichtungen (113) mit den Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen
zur Verarbeitung der modifizierten darstellenden Signale zur Ausbildung von Abschätzungen
der der Polarisation der empfangenen Signale entsprechenden Stoke'schen Parameter
(so, s" s2, S3) und zur Lieferung von Signalen gekoppelt sind, die die Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen
Parameter (so, s" S2, s3) darstellen, und daß mit den Verarbeitungseinrichtungen Einrichtungen zum Vergleich
der die Stokes'schen Parameter darstellenden Signale mit vorgegebenen Schwellwertsignalen
gekoppelt sind.
10. Detektor nach einem der vorhergehenden Ansprüche, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß
die empfangenen elektromagnetischen Signale quasi-monochromatisch sind.
11. Detektor nach Anspruch 9 oder 10, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Empfangseinrichtungen
erste, auf eine erste vorgegebene Polarisationskomponente der elektromagnetischen
Signale ansprechende Antenneneinrichtungen (127) und zweite Antenneneinrichtungen
(120) einschließen, die auf eine zweite Polarisationskomponente der elektromagnetischen
Signale ansprechen, die im wesentlichen orthogonal zu der ersten vorgegebenen Polarisation
ist, daß die Empfangs einrichtungen weiterhin Einrichtungen (116) zur Erzeugung linearer
frequenzmodulierter Signale, Einrichtungen zum Anschalten der Generatoreinrichtungen
an die ersten und zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen (127, 120), wobei ein lineares frequenzmoduliertes
Signale von den ersten und zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen ausgestrahlt und empfangen
wird und erste und zweite Mischereinrichtungen (130, 121) umfassen, die mit den ersten
bzw. zweiten Antenneneinrichtungen (127, 120) sowie mit den Generatoreinrichtungen
(116) gekoppelt sind, um einen Teil der erzeugten linearen frequenzmodulierten Signale
und der empfangenen linearen frequenzmodulierten Signale zu mischen und um erste und
zweite Signale zu erzeugen, die die ersten und zweiten Polarisationssignalkomponenten
darstellen, und daß diese darstellenden Signale den Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen
(112) zugeführt werden.
12. Detektor nach Anspruch 11, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen
(112) erste und zweite Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen (112b, 112a), mit den ersten
Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen gekoppelte Einrichtungen (136) zum Verzögern des ersten
darstellenden Signals, Einrichtungen (134) zur Erzeugung von Signalen, die den Sinus
von vorausgewählten Polarisationswinkeln darstellen, erste mit dem Sinusgenerator
und den Verzögerungseinrichtungen gekoppelte Multipliziereinrichtungen (135) zur Multiplikation
der verzögerten Signale mit den den Sinus darstellenden Signalen, Einrichtungen (132)
zur Erzeugung von Signalen, die den Kosinus der verausgewählten. Polarisationswinkel
darstellen, und zweite Multipliziereinrichtungen (133) einschließen, die mit dem Kosinusgenerator
und den zweiten Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen gekoppelt sind und die zweiten darstellenden
Signale mit den den Kosinus darstellenden Signalen multiplizieren.
13. Detektor nach einem der Ansprüche 9 bis 12, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen
erste und zweite Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen (112b, 112a), erste und zweite Ausgangsanschlußeinrichtungen
(112d, 112c), mit den ersten Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen (112b) gekoppelte Einrichtungen
(146) zur Verzögerung des ersten empfangenen Signals, zwischen den Verzögerungseinrichtungen
(146) und den ersten Ausgangsanschlußeinrichtungen (112d) eingeschaltete Abschwächereinrichtungen
(147) zur Änderung der Amplitude der verzögerten Signale, mit den zweiten Eingangsanschlußeinrichtungen
(112a) gekoppelte Einrichtungen (148) zur Invertierung eines zweiten empfangenen Signals,
zweite Abschwächereinrichtungen (150) zur Änderung der Amplitude der ihm zugeführten
Signale, und mit den Invertiereinrichtungen (148) gekoppelte Einrichtungen (149) zur
schaltbaren Zuführung eines invertierten abgeschwächten Signals und eines nicht invertierten
abgeschwächten Signals an die Ausgangsanschlußeinrichtungen der Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen
umfassen.
14. Detektor nach Anspruch 9, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die Verarbeitungseinrichtungen
(113) mit den Signalmodifikationseinrichtungen gekoppelte Einrichtungen (140) zur
Summierung der modifizerten darstellenden Signale, mit den Summiereinrichtungen (140)
gekoppelte Detektoreinrichtungen (142) zur Bestimmung der Amplitude der summierten
Signale, mit den Detektoreinrichtungen (142) gekoppelte Einrichtungen (143) zum Quadrieren
von von den Detektoreinrichtungen empfangenen Signalen zur Lieferung von intensitätsdarstellenden
Signalen, und mit den Quadriereinrichtungen (143) gekoppelte Recheneinrichtungen (145)
umfassen, die Abschätzungen der Stoke'schen Parameter (so, S1' S2, s3) darstellende Signale aus den intensitätsdarstellenden Signalen ermitteln.
15. Detektor nach Anspruch 14, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß er weiterhin zwischen den
Summiereinrichtungen (140) und den Detektoreinrichtungen (142) eingeschaltete Einrichtungen
(141) zur Auswahl von Signalen mit Frequenzen innerhalb eines vorgegebenen Frequenzbandes
einschließt.
16. Detektor nach Anspruch 14, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß er weiterhin zwischen den
Quadriereinrichtungen (143) und den Recheneinrichtungen (145) eingeschaltete Einrichtungen
(144) zur Integration der intensitätsdarstellenden Signale aufweist.
17. Verfahren zur Feststellung des Vorhandenseins eines Radarziels, das in Störziele
eingetaucht ist, wobei das Verfahren die Schritte Anstrahlung des Radarziels mit elektromagnetischer
Strahlung zur Lieferung eines von dem Ziel reflektierten Signals, des Empfangs von
elektromagnetischen Strahlungssignalkomponenten des reflektierten Signals, die vorgegebene
nicht identische Polarisationen aufweisen, der Lieferung von die Signalkomponenten
darstellenden Signale und der Verarbeitung dieser darstellenden Signale umfaßt, dadurch
gekennzeichnet, daß der Verarbeitungsschritt derart erfolgt, daß Abschätzungen der
Stokes'schen Parameter (s0, s1, s2, s3) ausgebildet werden, die der Polarisation der Signalkomponenten entsprechen, und
daß Signale geliefert werden, die die Darstellungen der Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen
Parameter darstellen, und daß das Verfahren den weiteren Schritt des Vergleichs der
die Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen Parameter darstellenden Signale mit vorgegebenen
Schwellwertsignalen zur Lieferung von Signalen umfaßt, die diejenigen der die Abschätzungen
der Stokes'schen Parameter (s0, s1, s2, s3) darstellenden Signale anzeigen, die einen Signalpegel aufweisen, der größer als
der der Schwellwertsignale ist.
18. Verfahren nach Anspruch 17, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die empfangenen Signalkomponenten
erste Signalkomponenten des reflektierten Signals mit einer ersten vorgegebenen Polarisation
und zweite Signalkomponenten des reflektierten Signals mit einer zweiten vorgegebenen
Polarisation umfassen, die im wesentlichen orthogonal zu der ersten vorgegebenen Polarisation
ist.
19. Verfahren nach Anspruch 17 oder 18, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der Verarbeitungsschritt
die folgenden Schritte umfaßt: Feststellen der Amplitude Ah(t) eines ersten darstellenden
Signals, Feststellen der Amplitude Av(t) eines zweiten darstellenden Signals, Quadrieren der ersten und zweiten hinsichtlich
ihrer Amplitude ermittelten Signale zur Lieferung erster und zweiter quadrierter Signale,
Subtrahieren des zweiten quadrierten Signals von dem ersten quadrierten Signal zur
Bestimmung des Signals Ah2(t)-Av2(t), Addieren der ersten und zweiten quadrierten Signale zur Bestimmung des Signals
Ah2(t)+Av2(t), Phasenverschieben des zweiten darstellenden Signals um 90°, Multiplizieren des
phasenverschobenen Signals mit dem ersten darstellenden Signal, Filtern des Produktes
des ersten darstellenden Signals und des phasenverschobenen Signals, um den Ausdruck
des Produktes auszuwählen, der dem Sinus der Phasendifferenz der ersten und zweiten
Signalkomponenten entspricht, Verstärken des Sinusausdruckes um einen Faktor von vier,
so daß das Signal Ah(t) Av(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) bestimmt wird, Multiplizieren der ersten und zweiten darstellenden Signale, Filtern
des Produktes der ersten und zweiten darstellenden Signale Zur Auswahl des Ausdruckes
des Produktes, das dem Kosinus der Phasendifferenz der ersten und zweiten Signale
entspricht, und Verstärken des Kosinusausdruckes um einen Faktor von vier, wodurch
das Signal Ah(t) Av(t) cos (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) bestimmt ist.
20. Verfahren nach Anspruch 19, gekennzeichnet durch den weiteren Schritt der Integration
der Signale Ah2(t), Av2(t), Ah(t) · Av(t) cos (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) und Ah(t) . Av(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)).
21. Verfahren zur Festellung des Vorhandenseins eines Radarziels, das in Störziele
eingebettet ist, wobei das Verfahren die Schritte der Anstrahlung des Radarziels mit
zumindestens zwei elektromagnetischen Signalen mit nicht identischen Polarisationen,
den Empfang elektromagnetischer Signalkomponenten von empfangenen Signalen von dem
Ziel mit nicht identischen Polarisationen und die Verarbeitung der empfangenen Signale
umfaßt, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß das Verfahren die weiteren Schritte der Modifikation
der empfangenen Signale entsprechend vorausgewählter Phasenverschiebungen und Polarisationswinkel
zur Lieferung von modifizierten darstellenden Signalen, die Verarbeitung der modifizierten
darstellenden Signale zur Ausbildung von Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen Parameter
(s0, s1, s2, s3), die der Polarisation der Signalkomponenten entsprechen, und zur Lieferung von Signall,
die die Abschätzungen der Stokes'schen Parameter darstellen, und des Vergleichs der
die Stokes'schen Parameter darstellenden Signale mit vorgegebenen Schwellwertsignalen
umfaßt.
22. Verfahren nach einem der Anspruch 17 bis 21, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die anstrahlende
und die empfangende elektromagnetische Strahlung quasi-monochromatisch ist.
23. Verfahren nach Anspruch 21, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß die empfangenen Signalkomponenten
eine erste Signalkomponente des reflektierten Signals mit einer ersten vorgebenen
Polarisation und eine zweite Signalkomponente des reflektierten Signals mit einer
zweiten vorgegebenen Polarisation umfassen, die im wesentlichen orthogonal zu der
ersten vorgegebenen Polarisation ist.
24. Verfahren nach einem der Anspruch 21 bis 23, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der Schritt
der Signalmodifikation die Schritte der Auswahl von Polarisationswinkeln 0 und Phasenverschiebungen
ε zur Ausbildung einer Vielzahl von Meßpaaren (θ,ε), der Phasenverschiebung der ersten
Signalkomponente um eine der Phasenverschiebungen ε, der Erzeugung eines Signals,
das den Sinus des ausgewählten Polaritätswinkels 0, der mit der einen Phasenverschiebung
E gepaart ist, darstellt, der Erzeugung eines Signals, das den Kosinus des ausgewählten
Polaritätswinkels 0, der mit der einen Phasenverschiebung ε gepaart ist, darstellt,
der Multiplikation des verzögerten Signals mit dem den Sinus darstellenden Signal,
und der Multiplikation der zweiten Signalkomponente mit dem den Kosinus darstellenden
Signal unfaßt, so daß erste und zweite modifizierte Signale geliefert werden.
25. Verfahren nach einem der Ansprüche 21 bis 23, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der
Schritt der Signalmodifikation die folgenden Schritte umfaßt: Auswählen von Polarisationswinkeln
0 und Phasenverschiebungen zur Ausbildung einer Vielzahl von Meßpaaren (θ,ε), der
Phasenverschiebung der ersten Signalkomponenten um eine der Phasenverschiebungen ε,
der Abschwächung der Amplitude des verzögerten Signals entsprechend dem Sinus des
ausgewählten Polarisationswinkels 0, der mit der einen Phasenverschiebung ε gepaart
ist, der Abschwächung der Amplitude des zweiten darstellenden Signals entsprechend
dem Kosinus des ausgewählten Polarisationswinkels 0, der mit der einen Phasenverschiebung
ε gepaart ist, und der Invertierung des zweiten darstellenden Signals entsprechend
dem Kosinus des vorausgewählten Polarisationswinkels 0, der mit der ersten Phasenverschiebung
ε gepaart ist, wodurch die ersten und zweiten modifizierten Signale geliefert werden.
26. Verfahren nach einem der Ansprüche 21 bis 23, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der
Schritt der Verarbeitung für die folgenden Meßpaare durchgeführt wird: (0°, 0), (45°,
0), (90°, 0), (135°, O), (45°, π/2) und (135°, π/21.
27. Verfahren nach Anspruch 26, dadurch gekennzeichnet, daß der Schritt der Verarbeitung
die folgenden Schritte umfaßt: Summieren der ersten und zweiten modifizierten Signale
zur Lieferung eines summierten Signals, Feststellen der Amplitude |E(t;θ,ε)| des summierten
Signals, Quadrierten des summierten Signals zur Lieferung von intensitätsdarstellenden
Signalen I(θ,ε)=|E(t;θ;ε)|2, wodurch die intensitätsdarstellenden Signale I(0°, 0), I(45°, 0), I(90°,0), I(135°,
0), I(45°, π/2) und I(135°, π/2) ausgebildet werden, sowie die Schritte der Summierung
des intensitätsdarstellenden Signals I(0°, 0) und I(90°, 0) zur Bestimmung des Signals
I(0°, 0)+1(90°, 0) der Subtraktion des intensitätsdarstellenden Signals I(09°, 0)
von dem intensitätsdarstellenden Signal I(0°, 0) zur Bestimmung des Signals I(0°,
0)-1(90°, 0), der Subtraktion des intensitätsdarstellenden Signals I(135°, 0) von
dem intensitätsdarstellenden Signal f(45°, 0) zur Bestimmung des Signals I(45°, 0)-I(135°,
0) und der Subtraktion des intensitätsdarstellenden Signals I(135°, π/2) von dem intensitätsdarstellenden
Signal I(45°, π/2) zur Bestimmung des Signals I(45°, π/2)-f(135°, π/2
28. Verfahren nach Anspruch 27, gekennzeichnet durch den weiteren Schritt der Integration
der intensitätsdarstellenden Signale, wodurch abschätzungen der Stokes'schen Paramter
(s0, s1, s2, s3) gewonnen werden.
29. Verfahren nach Anspruch 28, gekennzeichnet durch den weiteren Schritt der Filterung
des summierten Signals.
1. Détecteur de polarisation radar comprenant un dispositif de réception (11, 21,
25) destiné à recevoir des signaux électromagnétiques ayant plusieurs composantes
ayant chacune des polarisations prédéterminées non identiques afin que des signaux
représentatifs des composantes du signal reçusoient formés, et un processeur (12)
couplé au dispositif de réception et destiné à traiter les signaux représentatifs,
caractérisé en ce que le processeur (12) est destiné à établir des estimations des
paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) correspondant à la polarisation des signaux et à transmettre des signaux représentatifs
des estimations des paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) et un dispositif (54) couplé au processeur est destiné à comparer les signaux représentatifs
des estimations des paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) à des signaux prédéterminés de seuil et à transmettre des signaux indicatifs des
signaux représentatifs des valeurs estimées des paramètres de Stokes (so, s1, s2, s3) ayant un niveau de signal supérieur aux signaux respectifs de seuil.
2. Détecteur selon la revendication 1, caractérisé en ce que le dispositif de réception
comporte une première antenne (25) sensible à une première composante de polarisation
prédéterminée des signaux électromagnétiques, une seconde antenne (21) sensible à
une seconde composante de polarisation des signaux électromagnétiques, sensiblement
orthogonale à la première polarisation prédéterminée, et le dispositif de réception
comporte en outre un générateur (13) de signaux linéaires modulés en fréquences, un
dispositif de couplage du générateur (13) à la première et à la seconde antenne (25,
21) de manière que le signal linéaire soit transmis et reçu par la première et la
seconde antenne, et un premier et un second mélangeur (26, 34) couplés respectivement
à la première et à la seconde antenne et au générateur et destinés à mélanger.une
partie des signaux linéaires créés et des signaux linéaires reçus afin qu'ils forment
des premiers et seconds signaux représentatifs de composantes à la première et à la
seconde polarisation, les signaux représentatifs ètant couplés au processeur (12).
3. Détecteur selon la revendication 2, caractérisé en ce que le dispositif de réception
comporte en outre un premier et un second dispositif de sélection de fréquence (30,
35) couplés afin qu'ils reçoivent les signaux représentatifs du premier et du second
mélangeur (26, 34) respectivement et qu'ils sélectionnent les signaux contenus dans
une bande prédéterminée.
4. Détecteur selon l'une des revendications 2 et 3, caractérisé en ce que le dispositif
de réception comporte en outre un premier dispositif (22) couplé entre le générateur
(13) et la première antenne (25) et destiné à déphaser les signaux.
5. Détecteur selon l'une quelconque des revendications 2 à 4, caractérisé en ce que
le dispositif de réception comprend en outre un dispositif (14) monté entre la générateur
(13) et la première et la seconde antenne (25, 21) et destiné à faire varier la puissance
qui leur est couplée.
6. Détecteur selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en
ce que le processeur (12) comporte un premier et un second dispositif de détection
(31, 36) couplés au dispositif de réception et destinés à déterminer l'amplitude des
premier et second signaux représentatifs reçus du dispositif de réception, un premier
et un second dispositif conformateur (38, 37) couplés respectivement au premier et
au second dispositif de détection (31, 36) et destinés à conformer les signaux reçus
du premier et du second dispositif de détection (31, 36) et à former des premier et
second signaux conformés, un dispositif de soustraction (41) relié au premier et au
second dispositif conformateur (38, 37) et destiné à soustraire le second signal conformé
du premier, un dispositif de sommation (33) couplé aux premier et second dispositif
conformateur (38, 37) et destiné à à additionner les premier et second signaux conformés,
un premier dispositif multiplicateur (42) couplé au dispositif de réception et destiné
à multiplier le premier signal représentatif par le second signal représentatif, un
second dispositif déphaseur (46) couplé au dispositif de réception et destiné à déphaser
le second signal représentatif de 90°, un second dispositif multiplicateur (50) couplé
au second dispositif déphaseur (46) et couplé aussi au dispositif de réception, afin
qu'il multiplie les signaux provenant du second dispositif déphaseur par le premier
signal représentatif, et un premier amplificateur (44) couplé au premier dispositif
multiplicateur (42) et destiné à amplifier le signale de sortie de ce dernier, et
un second amplificateur (52) couplé au second dispositif multiplicateur (50) et destiné
à amplifier le signal de sortie de ce dernier.
7. Détecteur selon la revendication 6, caractérisé en ce que le processeur (12) comporte
en outre un troisième dispositif de sélection de fréquences (43) monté entre le premier
dispositif multiplicateur (42) et le premier amplificateur (44) et destiné à sélectionner
des fréquences contenues dans une bande prédéterminée, et un quatrième dispositif
de sélection de fréquences (51) monté entre le second dispositif multiplicateur (50)
et le second amplificateur (52) et destiné à sélectionner des fréquences contenues
dans une bande prédéterminée.
8. Détecteur selon l'une des revendications 6 et 7, caractérisé en ce que le processeur
(12) comporte en outre un premier intégrateur (32) monté entre le premier dispositif
conformateur (38) et les dispositifs de sommation et de soustraction et destiné à
intégrer les signaux, un second intégrateur (40) monté entre le second dispositif
conformateur (37) et les dispositifs sommateur et soustracteur afin qu'il intègre
les signaux, un troisième intégrateur (45) relié au premier amplificateur (44) et
destiné à intégrer les signaux, et un quatrième intégrateur (53) relié au second amplificateur
(52) et destiné à intégrer les signaux.
9. Détecteur de polarisation de signaux d'une cible radar, comprenant un dispositif
de réception (111, 120, 127) destiné à recevoir des signaux électromagnétiques ayant
plusieurs composantes ayant chacune des polarisations prédéterminées non identiques,
et un processeur (113) couplé au dispositif de réception (111, 120, 127) et destiné
à traiter les signaux reçus, caractérisé en ce qu'il comporte en outre un dispositif
modificateur (112) couplé au dispositif de réception (111, 120, 127) et destiné à
modifier les signaux reçus en fonction de déphasages et d'angles de polarisations
prédéterminées afin qu'il forme des signaux représentatifs modifiés, le processeur
(113) étant couplé au dispositif de modification de signaux afin qu'il traite les
signaux représentatifs modifiés et établisse des estimations des paramètres de Stokes
(so, sl, S2, S3) correspondant à la polarisation des signaux reçus et à transmettre des signaux représentatifs
desdites estimations des paramètres de Stokes (so, S1' s2, S3), et un dispositif couplé au processeur et destiné à comparer les signaux représentatifs
des paramètres de Stokes à des signaux prédéterminés de seuil.
10. Détecteur selon l'une quelconque des revendications précédentes, caractérisé en
ce que les signaux électromagnétiques reçus sont quasimonochromatiques.
11. Détecteur selon l'une des revendications 9 et 10, caractérisé en ce que le dispositif
de réception comporte une première antenne (127) sensible à une composante des signaux
électromagnétiques ayant une première polarisation prédéterminé, une seconde antenne
(120) sensible à une composante des signaux électromagnétique ayant une seconde polarisation
sensiblement perpendiculaire à la première polarisation prédéterminée, et le dispositif
de réception comporte en outre un dispositif (116) générateur de signaux linéaires
modulés en fréquences, un dispositif destiné à relier le dispositif générateur à la
première et à la seconde antenne (127, 120) de manière qu'un signal linéaire modulé
en fréquence soit transmis et reçu par la première et la seconde antenne, et un premier
et un second mélangeur (130, 121) reliés respectivement à la première et à la seconde
antenne et reliés en outre au générateur (116) afin qu'ils mélangent une partie des
signaux linéaires créés et des signaux linéaires reçus afin qu'ils forment des premiers
et des seconds signaux représentatifs des composantes ayant la première et la seconde
polarisation, les signaux représentatifs étant couplés au dispositif modificateur
de signaux (112).
12. Détecteur selon la revendication 11, caractérisé en ce que le dispositif modificateur
de signaux (112) comporte une première et une seconde borne d'entrée (112b, 112a),
un dispositif (136) relié à la première borne d'entrée et destiné à retarder le premier
signal représentatif, un dispositif (134) destiné à créer des signaux représentatifs
du sinus des angles prédéterminés de polarisation, une premier dispositif multiplicateur
(135) couplé au générateur de sinus et au dispositif à retard et destiné à multiplier
les signaux retardés par les signaux représentés du sinus, un dispositif (132) générateur
de signaux représentatifs du cosinus des angles prédéterminés de polarisation, et
un second dispositif multiplicateur (133) couplé au générateur de cosinus et à la
seconde borne d'entrée et destiné à multiplier les seconds signaux représentatifs
par les signaux représentatifs du cosinus.
13. Détecteur selon l'une quelconque des revendications 9 à 12, caractérisé en ce
que le dispositif modificateur de signaux comporte une première et une seconde borne
d'entrée (112b, 1 12a), une première et une seconde borne de sortie (112d, 112c, un
dispositif (146) relié à la première borne d'entrée (112b) et destiné à retarder un
premier signal reçu, un premier atténuateur (147) monté entre le dispositif à retard
(146) et la première borne de sortie (112d) et destiné à faire varier l'amplitude
des signaux retardés, un dispositif (148) couplé à la seconde borne d'entrée (112a)
et destiné à inverser un second signal reçu, un second atténuateur (150) destiné à
faire varier l'amplitude des signaux qui lui sont appliqués, et un dispositif (149)
couplé au dispositif d'inversion (148) et destiné à coupler de façon commutable un
signal atténué inversé et un signal atténué non inversé à la borne de sortie du dispositif
modificateur de signaux.
14. Détecteur selon la revendication 9, caractérisé en ce que le processeur (113)
comporte un dispositif (140) relié au dispositif modificateur de signaux et destiné
à additionner les signaux représentatifs modifiés, un dispositif (142) de détection
couplé au dispositif de sommation et destiné à déterminer l'amplitude des signaux
additionnés, un dispositif (143) couplé au dispositif de détection (142) et destiné
à conformer les signaux reçus du dispositif de détection afin qu'il forme des signaux
représentatifs d'intensité, et un dispositif de calcul (145) couplé au dispositif
conformateur (143) et destiné à établir des signaux représentatifs des estimations
des paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) à partir des signaux représentatifs d'intensité.
15. Détecteur selon la revendication 14, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend en outre
un dispositif (141) monté entre le dispositif sommateur (40) et le dispositif de détection
(142) et destiné à sélectionner des signaux à des fréquences contenues dans une bande
prédéterminée.
16. Détecteur selon la revendication 14, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend en outre
un dispositif (144) monté entre le dispositif conformateur (143) et le dispositif
de calcul (145) et destiné à intégrer les signaux représentatifs d'intensité.
17. Procédé de détection de la présence d'une cible radar enfouie dans un fond continu,
comprenant les étapes d'irradiation de la cible radar par un rayonnement électromagnétique
afin qu'un signal réfléchi par la cible soit formé, de réception de composantes du
rayonnement électromagnétique du signal réfléchi, ayant des polarisations prédéterminées
non identiques, de création de signaux représentatifs des composantes, et de traitement
des signaux représentatifs, caractérisé en ce que l'étape de traitement est telle
qu'elle assure l'établissement d'estimations des paramètres de Stokes (s0, s,, s2, S3) correspondant à la polarisation des composantes et la transmission de signaux représentatifs
des estimations des paramètres de Stokes, et en ce que le procédé comprend l'étape
supplémentaire de comparaison des signaux représentatifs des estimations des paramètres
de Stokes à des signaux prédéterminés de seuil afin que des signaux indicatifs desdits
signaux représentatifs des estimations de paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) ayant un niveau de signal supérieur aux signaux de seuil soient formés.
18. Procédé selon la revendication 17, caractérisé en ce que les composantes des signaux
reçus comportent des premières composantes du signal réfléchi ayant une première polarisation
prédéterminée, et des secondes composantes du signal réfléchi ayant une seconde polarisation
prédéterminée sensiblement perpendiculaire à la première polarisation prédéterminée.
19. Procédé selon l'une des revendications 17 et 18, caractérisé en ce que l'étape
de traitement comprend la détection de l'amplitude Ah(t) d'un premier signal représentatif, la détection de l'amplitude Av(t) d'un second signal représentatif, la conformation des premiers et seconds signaux
détectés en amplitude afin qu'un premier et un second signal conformé soient formés,
la soustraction du second signal conformé du premier afin qu'un signal Ah(t)-Av2(t) soit déterminé, l'addition du premier et du second signal conformé afin que le
signal Ah2(t)+Av2(t) soit déterminé, le déphasage de 90° du second signal représentatif, la multiplication
du signal déphasé par le premier signal représentatif, le filtrage du produit du premier
signal représentatif par le signal déphasé afin que le terme du produit correspondant
au sinus du déphasage de la première et de la seconde composante soit sélectionné,
l'amplification du terme sinus par un facteur 4 si bien que le signal Ah(t) Ay(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) est déterminé, la multiplication du premier et du second signal représentatif,
le filtrage du produit du premier et du second signal représentatif afin que le terme
du produit correspondant au cosinus du déphasage du premier et du second signal soit
sélectionné, et l'amplification de ce terme cosinus par un facteur 4, si bien que
le signal Ah(t) Ay(t) cos (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)) est déterminé.
20. Procédé selon la revendication 19, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend en outre l'étap
d'intégration des signaux Ah2(t), Av2(t), Ah(t) Av(t) cos (φh(t)-ϕv(t)) et Ah(t) Av(t) sin (ϕh(t)-ϕv(t)).
21. Procédé de détection de la présence d'une cible radar enfouie dans un fond continu,
comprenant les étapes d'irradiation de la cible radar par au moins deux signaux électromagnétiques
ayant des polarisations non identiques, de réception de composantes des signaux électromagnétiques
réfléchis par la cible, ayant des polarisations non identiques, et de traitement des
signaux reçus, caractérisé en ce que le procédé comprend en outre des étapes de modification
des signaux reçus en fonction d'angles de polarisation et de déphasage prédéterminés
afin qu'il forme des signaux représentatifs modifiés, de traitement de signaux représentatifs
modifiés afin qu'il établisse des estimations des paramètres de Stokes (s0, s1, s2, s3) correspondant à la polarisation desdites composantes avec formation de signaux représentatifs
des estimations des paramètres de Stokes, et de comparaison des signaux représentatifs
des paramètres de Stokes à des signaux prédéterminés de seuil.
22. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications 17 à 21, caractérisé en ce que
le rayonnement électromagnétique d'irradiation reçu est quasimonochromatique.
23. Procédé selon la revendication 21, caractérisé en ce que les composantes du signal
reçu comportent une première composante du signal réfléchi ayant une première polarisation
prédéterminée, et une seconde composante du signale réfléchi ayant une seconde polarisation
prédéterminée sensiblement perpendiculaire à la première.
24. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications 21 à 23, caractérisé en ce que
l'étape de modification de signaux comprend les étapes de sélection d'angle de polarisation
0 et de déphasage ε afin que plusieurs paires de mesures (θ,ε) soient établies, de
déphasage de la première composante de l'un des déphasages ε, de création d'un signal
représentatif du sinus de l'angle choisi de polarisation 0 apparié audit déphasage
ε, de création d'un signal représentatif du cosinus de l'angle choisi de polarisation
θ apparié audit déphasage ε, de multiplication du signal retardé par le signal représentatif
du sinus, et de multiplication de la seconde composante par le signal représentatif
du cosinus afin qu'un premier et un second signal modifié soient formés.
25. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications 21 à 23, caractérisé en ce que
I'étape de modification de signaux comprend les étapes de sélection d'angles 0 de
polarisation et de déphasages ε afin que plusieurs paires de mesures (θ,ε) soient
établies, de déphasage de la première composante par l'un dès-déphasages ε, d'atténuation
de l'amplitude du signal retardé d'après le sinus de l'angle choisi de polarisation
0 apparié au premier déphasage ε, d'atténuation de l'amplitude du second signal représentatif
en fonction du cosinus de l'angle choisi de polarisation 0 apparié audit déphasage
ε, et d'inversion du second signal représentatif en fonction du cosinus de l'angle
prédéterminé de polarisation 0 apparié audit déphasage ε, si bien qu'un premier et
un second signal modifié sont formés.
26. Procédé selon l'une quelconque des revendications 21 à 23, dans lequel l'étape
de traitement est exécutée pour les paires de mesures (0°, 0), (45°, 0), (90°, 0),
(135°, 0), (45°,π/2) et (135°, π/2).
27. Procédé selon la revendication 26, caractérisé en ce que l'étape de traitement
comprend les étapes de sommation des premier et second signaux modifiés afin qu'un
signal sommé soit formé, de détection de l'amplitude |E(t;8·,ε)| du signal sommé,
de conformation du signal somme afin qu'il forme des signaux represen- tatifs d'intensite
I(θ,ε)=|E(t;θ,ε)|2, si bien que les signaux représentatifs d'intensité I(0°,0),I(45°,0), I(90°, 0) I(135°,
0), I(45°', 0, π/2) et I(135°, π/2) sont établis, et comprenant en outre les étapes
de sommation du signal représentatif d'intensité I(0°, 0) et 1(90°, 0) afin que le
signal I(0°, 0)+1(90°, 0) soit déterminé, de soustraction du signal représentatif
d'intensité 1(90°, 0) du signal représentatif d'intensité I(0°, 0) afin que le signal
I(0°, 0)-I(90°, 0) soit déterminé de soustraction du signal représentatif d'intensité
I(135°, 0) du signal représentatif d'intensité I(45°, 0) afin que le signal I(45°,
0)-I(135°, 0) soit déterminé, et de soustraction du signal représentatif d'intensité
I(135°, π/2) du signal représentatif I(45°, π/2) afin que le signal t(45°, π/2)-I(135°,
π2) soit déterminé.
28. Procédé selon la revendication 27, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend en outre l'intégration
des signaux représentatifs d'intensité de manière que des estimations des paramètres
de Stokes (s0, s1, s2 et s3) soient obtenues.
29. Procédé selon la revendication 28, caractérisé en ce qu'il comprend en outre le
filtrage du signal sommé.